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Late 20th century life gets a twist of 'Vodka Lemon'

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  • Late 20th century life gets a twist of 'Vodka Lemon'

    The Daily Star, Lebanon
    Sept 25 2004

    Late 20th century life gets a twist of 'Vodka Lemon'

    Iraqi Kurd's tragicomic film about post-communist Armenia is a
    highlight of the Cinema Days festival

    By Jim Quilty
    Daily Star staff

    BEIRUT: Hinner Salim's "Vodka Lemon" opens with an old man in bed. A
    car is dragging him, bed and all, along a snow-covered road. He
    arrives at his destination, the graveyard, solemnly removes both
    racks of false teeth and begins to play the doudouk - the beautifully
    mournful pipe that is probably Armenia's best-known export, aside
    from the Armenians themselves. The old fellow is one of a band of
    musicians summoned to perform for somebody else's funeral.

    It is one of those moments that audiences have learned to expect of
    films emerging from the once-communist world. Gypsy brass bands run
    behind speeding cars while they play (alternatively having money
    thrown and bullets fired at them), a la Emir Kusturica's
    "Underground." Cows inexplicably fall from the sky to kill
    bridegrooms, as in Bakhtyar Khudojnazarov's "Luna Papa." These
    bizarre, funny, poetic conjurings serve as brilliant metaphors for
    the tragicomic dislocations of the late 20th century.

    There are a number of such moments in "Vodka Lemon," one of the
    non-Arab "guest films" at the Ayam Beirut Cinemaiyya (Cinema Days)
    film festival which ends Sunday. Salim's skill in using them renders
    his story - which is pretty damn depressing in itself - all the more
    entertaining and artful.

    Set in a bleak, snowbound Armenian village, the story revolves around
    Hamo (Romik Avinian) and Nina (Lala Sarkissian) and the snowbound
    graveyard they visit every day. Hamo's wife died some years earlier,
    leaving him a trio of grown sons. The oldest, Dilovan (Ivan Franek),
    lives poorly in the same village as Hamo, another works in Russia,
    the youngest, Robert, has emigrated to the good life in Paris.

    The arrival of the youngest son's letters sends Hamo to Yerevan
    periodically, in hopes the boy is sending money. Salim wrings some
    great comedy out of Hamo's plight. Upon his first return from
    Yerevan, his son, then the other men of the village materialize on
    his doorstep looking for handouts. None of them believe that there
    was no money enclosed, so he has to show them the letter and the
    photo of his son happily hugging his French girlfriend.

    Money, or the lack of it, nudges the plot forward. The village is
    becalmed, stuck in the doldrums of economic transition. The communist
    economy has evaporated, and with it the provision of basic
    essentials. Consumer capitalism - or rather the jobs that make
    consumer capitalism "work" - has yet to arrive. With no visible means
    of income aside from sheep-rearing and sales of the local tipple (the
    ubiquitous, almond-flavoured "Vodka Lemon"), the locals have been
    forced to start selling their meager possessions. The images of
    people staggering along desolate roadways lugging pieces of furniture
    on their backs would be utterly depressing were they not so absurdly
    funny.

    Nina is also next to penniless. Her husband, a fighter of some
    description, has been dead for a decade, leaving her with a pair of
    daughters. One of them has made it safely outside the village. Nina
    explains to Hamo that the other daughter, a musician, plays piano in
    a hotel but that her only source of income are "tips" from her
    "admirers." As we later see, in post-communist Armenia personal
    possessions aren't the only things people are forced to put a price
    on.


    When Hamo's granddaughter becomes pregnant by one of the local men
    who's made good in capitalist Russia, Hamo, his son and the young
    man's father negotiate a marriage. Hamo's son remarks that his
    daughter is no whore, yet we later learn that the fee for the
    "marriage contract" - the price of his daughter's virginity - is
    $2,000 and a job for him in Russia. When his son-in-law can't furnish
    the fee, the father-in-law shoots him.

    Though he carries a gun and, like so many of the men in the film,
    looks a bit of a thug, Hamo's son isn't particularly villainous. He's
    just desperate for want of money. The film lingers over the
    implication that in circumstances where everything has a price -
    which, with greater or lesser degrees of overt violence, are the
    circumstances everywhere - human dignity goes out the window. Many a
    devastatingly bleak film has worked with this very theme, in fact.
    Salim, however, resists the temptation.

    This may have something to do with the fact that - if the press is to
    be believed - Hinner Salim is relatively new to film. Like Iranian
    director Abbas Kiarostami, this native of Iraqi Kurdistan is known as
    a poet and painter. It is tempting to compare Salim's pacing, and his
    remarkable use of landscape, with that of Kiarostami, but the
    comparison wouldn't do justice to the subtle emotion and wry humour
    that are central to "Vodka Lemon."

    Hamo and Nina strike up a friendship while visiting their respective
    graves. When she's not on the bus one day - she can't pay the $5 in
    accumulated fares she owes the bus driver - Hamo pays her bill,
    though he's been selling his possessions at the open market. Nina
    later loses her job at the Vodka Lemon kiosk - the owner complains
    that the location's not making him any money - at the same time that
    her daughter loses her meal ticket. Destitute, she calls upon Hamo to
    give her a hand, moving her only valued possession - an out-of-tune
    piano that her daughter uses to practice.

    They move it to the roadside, but Salim lets the couple find another
    use for the instrument, one that - if fantastical, in the tradition
    of magic realism - reaffirms and reinforces the dignity of his
    characters rather than utterly extinguishing it. Though set in
    Armenia, Hinner Salim's film takes his audience on a stroll through a
    compact metaphor for the human condition at the beginning of the 21st
    century. Remarkably enough, he leaves us smiling.


    Hinner Salim's "Vodka Lemon," the closing film of Ayam Beirut
    Cinemaiyya Film Festival, will screen at Beirut's Cinema Sofil on
    Sunday, 26 September, at 8.30pm
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